Preliminary interview
General clinical Examination
Prostate examination
Laboratory tests
Transrectal Prostate ultrasound (TRUS)
TRUS
and acute prostatitis
TRUS
and chronic prostatitis
X-
rays
Cystoscopy
In cases of acute prostatitis the prostate remains normal
or increased
in size with regular lobe symmetry. In the early stages of mild forms a hypoechogenic peri-urethral
halo is visualized which is due to oedema. As
the disease progresses hypoechogenic intra-glandular filaments are observed. Caused by
inflammation-induced blood vessel dilation they are sometimes associated with dilation of the
Santorini periprostatic vein plexus.
In severe forms of acute prostatitis the prostate is enlarged and areas of hypoechogenic
tissue are larger because the inflammation is more extended. In older patients or in
patients with compromised immunological systems a prostatic abscess may develop. On the
ultrasound screen the abscess appears as a transonic area with irregular edges (see photo).
PROSTATE PARENCHYMA
The prostate capsule and size are usually normal. Ultrasound abnormalities may be found
throughout the parenchyma or only in the
periurethral or peripheral areas. In cases of mild chronic inflammation a high resolution
ultrasound probe is essential for detection of minimal signs of the disease which are
irregularly-shaped, highly echogenic oval areas. Reactive dilation of peri-prostatic veins
is sometimes presentbut is not a specific indication for diagnosis. In more severe cases of chronic inflammation three ultrasound patterns
are found in the parenchyma:
- strongly hypoechogenic areas with edges merging into the surrounding parenchyma (see photo);
- areas with a homogenous hyperechogenicity and well-defined saw-tooth edges (see photo);
- strongly hyperechogenic areas which are sometimes surrounded by a hypoechogenic
halo due to the acute reaction in the surrounding gland.
FIBROUS CALCIFICATIONS
Fibrous calcifications, ranging from a few millimeters to some
centimetres in diameter, appear as highly hyperechogenic round, irregular ovoid or dot-like
(the so-called calcium spray) images which, depending on their density, may have an
underlying posterior shadow cone. The diagnostic value of this finding is closely
correlated with the patients age. In an elderly man calcification in the peripheral
area of a prostatic adenoma is caused by calcium precipitation inside the ducts or acina,
due to adenoma compression and is not usually symptomatic. In a young man this type of
calcification is found in 85% of patients with symptoms of prostatitis and in about 12-15%
of symptom-free subjects.
In young patients the calcification is, for anatomic reasons, usually localized in the
periurethral area and is caused by crystal precipitation inside the periurethral acini
whose ducts are obstructed by inflammation. Calcification is never a real concrete
formation like a kidney stone but always a tenacious, weak aggregate which must be
destroyed to ensure therapy is efficacious (see film).
Calcifications are a major associated cause of the symptoms of prostatitis and they
perpetrate the disease by maintaining the microbial agents
within, like the besieged in a fortified city. These microbes are the source of
re-infection. Symptoms associated with calcification vary with the localization and are as
follows:
- periurethral sub-bladder neck: micturitional disturbances, stabbing pain radiating to
the penis tip at the start and/or end of micturition;
- median periurethral area: perineal tension or no symptoms;
- peri-Veru montanum: premature ejaculation, ejaculation pain, feeling of obstruction in
the passage of sperm, hemospermia (see photo);
- peri or intra-ejaculatory ducts: symptoms are the same as those of peri-Veru montanum
calcifications (see photo).
As I have already
said these calcifications have a high urate, creatinine, xanthine and uridine content.
Consequently some authors have attempted to cure prostatitis by administering anti-uric
substances by the general route. Symptoms improved to a certain extent but only for as
long as the drug was taken.
EJACULATORY DUCTS
When normal, the ejaculatory ducts can be visualized, particularly during micturition, as
two hypoechogenic streaks converging on the veru montanum. They can be imaged one at a
time on a linear plane. When acutely inflamed the image is even clearer because the wall
edema enhances visibility. In cases of chronic inflammation the walls
frequently become
hyperechogenic because of thickening and fibrosis.
Sometimes fibrosis is associated with intraluminal calculi which are visualized as
echo-lucent spots in a circular rosary-bead formation (see
photo).
Symptoms associated with ejaculatory duct inflammation are manifested during orgasm and
include pain or burning during ejaculation, sometimes hemospermia, a feeling of
obstruction, reduced sperm quantity and impaired quality and even no ejaculate.
SEMINAL VESICLES
When normal the seminal vesicles are clearly visible above the prostate base (especially
after a period of sexual abstinence). They appear as two hypoechogenic oval structures
with many internal hypoechogenic septates. When inflamed they are usually dilated because voiding is obstructed by edema in the ampoule or
ejaculatory ducts. Ultrasound
finding similar to those of cysts may be mono- or bi-lateral
In cases of major chronic inflammation due, for example, to trichomonas or
gonorrhea, the vesicles sometimes appear sclerotic with hyperechogenic walls.
When inflamed the seminal vesicles usually cause a continual, dull pain which may
intensify during defecation, thus producing reflex constipation and giving rise to a
vicious circle harder faeces and more pain during defecation.
Because of their anatomical configuration the seminal vesicles are often the last area to
be cured of inflammation and treatment must be monitored very carefully.
UTRICULUS
Normally this involuted organ is invisible during an ultrasound scan. Sometimes it remains
active and may dilate and form cysts which can be visualized as asonic areas near the
median urethra. Even with cysts the patient may be asymptomatic but if pain is present or generated by the cysts
it can be cured with the
appropriate therapy.
BLADDER NECK AND TRIGONE
Functional ultrasound scanning of this area is possible only during micturition. In normal subjects the start of micturition
corresponds to a gradual homogenous opening of the bladder neck. The anterior and
posterior parts form a cone with its base on the trigone and its apex continuing into the
urethra (see photo). In the presence of bladder neck
sclerosis or dysectasia ultrasound visualizes the slow opening of a rigid, not soft,
bladder neck (shutter opening). A clear endoluminal protuberance appears in the posterior
portion (posterior lip). The physiological funnel shape is changed (see photo) and the space for the stream of urine is markedly
reduced which causes an accelerated flow rate. Consequently an abnormal bladder neck
closure at the end of micturition appears as a shutter closure and leaves a small trapped quantity of urine which drips out after
micturition is ended. When bladder neck sclerosis is present it must be corrected to prevent the development
of chronic prostatitis.
Primary or secondary inflammatory abnormalities in the trigone (trigonitis) are hard to
detect in an ultrasound scan unless they are very marked and associated with mucous
extroflexion (papillary trigonitis). The image shows much tiny digitation on the vessel
wall.
URETHRA
The urethra, like the bladder neck, can only be studied during the dynamic phase of
micturition. In normal subjects after bladder neck funneling the prostatic urethra
distends to a maximum of 10 mm. The walls are thin and very slightly more echogenic than
the surrounding glandular tissue (see photo). In cases of
urethritis the distension seems rigid and the walls are markedly more hyperechogenic and
thicker and have an irregular profile. The clearest indirect sign of urethral narrowing
(stenosis) below the tract visualized by
the ultrasound probe is overdilation of the prostatic urethra with no other sign of
disease (see photo).
These patients must then undergo radiography during micturition (urethrocystography)to
confirm the diagnosis.
(*Diagnostic Value = 10 when
necessary!)
In patients with chronic prostatitis in whom urethral
narrowing (stenosis) is suspected the only useful radiographic test is micturitional
retrograde urethrocystography. After instilling radio-opaque contrast medium into the
bladder the test images the shape and calibre of the entire urethra during physiological
micturition. This test is essential to confirm urethral stenosis.
(*Diagnostic
Value = 0/1)
In our experience with patients affected by prostatitis
cystoscopy is of little value and does not add to the data obtained from the other tests I
have mentioned. In cases of urethro-prostatitis cystoscopy before endoscopy such as
bladder neck resection or removal of urethral stenosis shows the urethra and the bladder
neck are very reddened and have dilated, easily ruptured blood vessels. In the prostatic
lodge blackish granules i.e. calculi in the periprostatic acini, are often observed.
In cases of urethral-prostate
reflux the walls of the prostatic lodge are no longer pink in color
but present with a greyish-mother-of-pearl
colour because of the fibrosis caused by the chronic inflammation.
Obviously this urethral tract will have lost its physiological elasticity and burning will
ensue during micturition because of lack of distension during the passage of urine. |